Repairs and New Installs
Irrigation Problems Get Worse When You Wait
Most irrigation issues start small. A single cracked pipe. A head that stopped rotating. A zone that pressurizes but puts out half the water it should. The problem is that Newton County's heavy clay soil does not forgive slow leaks. That moisture seeps down, softens the soil around your foundation, and starts pulling your landscaping beds out of shape. Zone failures left unaddressed kill entire sections of lawn before summer is over. By the time the damage is visible above ground, the repair bill has already grown.
Liba starts every irrigation job with a proper diagnosis before any digging. We run each zone, check pressure, inspect heads, and trace the line to find where the system is losing water. We do not guess and we do not dig blindly. Once we know exactly what is wrong, we give you a clear repair plan and a price before we start work.
For pipe repairs, we excavate cleanly, replace the damaged section with the correct fitting, and backfill and tamp so the surface looks right when we leave. For head replacements, we adjust coverage patterns so your lawn gets water and your driveway and sidewalk do not. Zone repairs address the electrical and hydraulic issues at the valve rather than patching symptoms at the surface. Controller upgrades give you accurate programming so every zone runs the right amount of time for current conditions.
We also design and install complete irrigation systems for residential and commercial properties across Newton County. New construction, older homes that have never had a system, and commercial properties that need a professional layout with proper zone balancing and commercial-grade heads. We pull the design together based on your property layout, soil type, and water pressure, then install it and walk you through the controller before we leave.
Liba serves Covington, Conyers, McDonough, Monroe, Loganville, and surrounding Newton County. GDOT certified, licensed and insured, family-owned since 2013.
Georgia averages 50 inches of rain per year but most of it falls unevenly. July and August bring dry stretches that kill unirrigated Bermuda within two weeks. Georgia red clay has poor water infiltration. Run irrigation too fast and the water runs off the surface before it soaks in. Proper zone scheduling in Newton County means shorter, more frequent cycles rather than one long soak. Backflow preventers are required by Georgia code on all irrigation systems tied to a municipal water supply.